Tag: trump

  • ‘Bright, Not Broken’: Irish Expert Pushes Back Against Autism Misinformation 

    ‘Bright, Not Broken’: Irish Expert Pushes Back Against Autism Misinformation 

    Irish neurodiversity and healthcare professionals are rejecting claims by U.S. president Donald Trump, who suggested that paracetamol use during pregnancy may increase the risk of autism in children. 

    There is no credible scientific evidence to support the statement, which has drawn criticism from international experts, including paediatric occupational therapist Adam Griffin. 

    Griffin, who has over 14 years’ experience in child and adolescent mental health and works across the Middle East, described the remarks as “deeply harmful.” 

    “This kind of misinformation shapes how people think, talk and respond to neurodivergent individuals,” Griffin emphasised. “Instead of recognising autism as a difference in how someone experiences and interacts with the world, it reinforces outdated ideas of deficit or disorder.” 

    The Health Products Regulatory Authority said paracetamol is “an important treatment option for the management of fever and pain in pregnancy,” and that “available evidence does not link its use to causing autism in children.” 

    The European Medicines Agency said evidence of any connection remains “inconsistent” and cautioned against drawing conclusions. In Ireland, the HSÉ continues to advise that paracetamol is safe during pregnancy when used as directed and for the shortest necessary time. 

    Griffin stated comments like Trump’s can have emotional and social consequences for families already navigating complex challenges. 

    “Families often feel a real sense of confusion, frustration, and hurt when public figures make sweeping or inaccurate comments about autism,” he said. “These statements tend to attract a lot of media attention, but they rarely include the nuance or context that real families live with every day.” 

    “For young people, it can increase feelings of shame or being misunderstood, and parents often worry about how others might now see or treat their child.” 

    Griffin highlighted that such misinformation adds pressure to families already under strain. 

    “It’s a reminder that words carry real weight, and that respectful, informed discussion is vital for the wellbeing and inclusion of neurodivergent individuals and their families,” he said. One of the most persistent myths, according to Griffin, is the idea that autistic people are somehow broken or difficult. 

    “A common misconception is that autism is something ‘other,’ that an autistic child is unrelatable, broken, or so different they are ‘not like other children.’ This sense of isolation is deeply felt by many neurodivergent individuals,” he said. 

    “In the words of Temple Grandin, autistic people are ‘bright, not broken.’ An analogy I often use is that autism is like a different operating system in an electronic device. It’s not broken, it’s Apple, not Android. It uses a different software to function, and the better we understand that system, the better we can support it.” 

    He warned that high-profile comments without scientific backing can be particularly harmful. 

    “What’s often more dangerous is when such statements contain elements of truth or connect tangentially to new treatment ideas but lack the proper context or evidence,” he said. “They can appear science-based without the rigour to back them up. These ‘half-truths’ can be even more harmful than outright falsehoods.” 

    Griffin urged families not to panic and to seek evidence-based guidance. 

    “My advice is to ground decisions in reliable, evidence-based information and to seek guidance from trusted professionals,” he said. “Families should remember that autism is a lived experience, not a single story, and there is no ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach.” 

    He also called on professionals and media to play their part in pushing back against false narratives. 

    “We need more voices from the autistic community, more context, and more clarity. For professionals, families, and the media alike, the focus should be on fostering informed dialogue that respects lived experience and prioritises evidence over sensationalism.” 

  • Dublin rally for America’s ‘Dreamers’

    Dublin rally for America’s ‘Dreamers’

    A rally was held in Dublin on Monday evening in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programme in the United States.

    The DACA programme was established by the Obama administration in 2012 to protect those who entered the US as minors from deportation. Donald Trump made the decision to end the programme in September this year.

    Those protected under DACA are called the “Dreamers” and 787,580 were granted approval by the time Donald Trump announced his decision to rescind the programme.

    On September 5th, the New York Times reported that US officials said “some of the 800,000 young adults brought into the United States illegally as children, and who qualify for the programme … will become eligible for deportation” as early as March.

    The New York Times also reported that Mr. Trump had said in a statement that he was driven by a concern for “the millions of Americans victimised by this unfair system.” Jeff Sessions, US Attorney General, said the program had “denied jobs to hundreds of thousands of Americans by allowing those same illegal aliens to take those jobs.”

    The rally in Dublin was organised by the Young, Paperless and Powerful (YPP), a group that focuses on the rights of undocumented youth in Ireland. The twin rally in New York was organised by ‘Make the Road New York’, an immigrant organisation based in the US.

    The two organisations are appealing to Irish-American Republican congressman Peter King to “stand for the undocumented in the US” before the 6th of December, which is the deadline Congress was given to find a legislative alternative and to draft a bill that would allow Dreamers to permanently stay in the US.

    Speaking to the crowd gathered at the Famine Memorial in Dublin, Sumayyah, a member of YPP said: “We believe that no young people should grow up undocumented in Ireland or anywhere. We’re a group of about 25 people, some of us are undocumented, some of us are not.

    “But tonight is not about us. It’s about the undocumented young people in the US who really need our help,” she added.

     

    Hajar 3
    Rally held in Dublin for undocumented in America. Photo by Hajar Akl

     

    “Young people in the United States are in the fight of their lives [to protect DACA],” said Migrant Rights Centre Ireland (MRCI) community worker Kate O’Connell, addressing the crowd.

    A letter written by a formerly undocumented student called Shiv was read out to the crowd. He spoke of his depression and fear of being “taken away” from his family during the seven years he was undocumented.

    “Every single year since 2007 I would watch a Taoiseach go to the US and seek the legalisation of undocumented Irish and I thought, ‘what a hypocrite’. Ireland has always been a nation of immigrants who left many years ago for a better life.

    The Irish diaspora in the UK, the US and the Australia, for example, are a testament of how much immigrants can contribute to a country.”

    In the letter, he also said “undocumented people make a huge contribution to Ireland, but so often their potential is wasted. We are young and full of potential, we are products of the Irish education system who cannot go to university.”

     

    Hajar 2
    People gather by the river Liffey in support of the undocumented in America. Photo by Hajar Akl

     

    The MRCI estimates there are up to 26,000 undocumented people in Ireland and that between 3,000 and 5,000 of them are under the age of eighteen.

    By Hajar Akl

  • Kenny announces referendum to allow Irish citizens abroad to vote in presidential elections

    Kenny announces referendum to allow Irish citizens abroad to vote in presidential elections

     

    Aoife Loughnane looks at the Taoiseach’s newly unveiled referendum plans and explores what this will mean for the Irish diaspora.

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  • Deflector Trump struggling to keep a lid on ties with the Kremlin

    Deflector Trump struggling to keep a lid on ties with the Kremlin

    While Donald Trump sounded more presidential at his recent address to Congress, the issue of Russian connections still lingers for team Trump. What does this all mean for the president, and for the Irish as the Patrick’s Day shamrock approaches? James Carroll reports.

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  • Opinion: Keep politics out of awards shows

    Opinion: Keep politics out of awards shows

    In the wake of a politically charged SAG awards and Meryl Streep’s Trumbashing speech at the Golden Globes, Cormac Murphy awaits more of the same self-adulating politics at the Oscars.

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  • Dubliners protest Trump in rain, wind and zeitgeist

    Dubliners protest Trump in rain, wind and zeitgeist

    Zuzia Whelan takes to the streets of Dublin alongside crowds protesting President Trump’s travel ban.

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